Vacuum Fluctuations in Experimental Practice - Comments

In summary: Virtual particles can be useful in diagrams, but they should not be allowed to break the fourth wall.
  • #36
A. Neumaier said:
Thanks for the references. It may take a while to find time to do the reading (and then also to respond to your previous post) as I have an upcoming deadline mid of June that takes a lot of my time.

I am interested both in mathematical physics (the really well defined mathematical side of physics) and in the modeling of applications in physics by the concepts from theoretical physics.

I'd need something that explains in quantum optics (or if necessary semiconductor) terms how the finite lifetime of the fundamental photon mode (a) arises, and (b) affects the modeling of typical experimental situations. I am not so much interested in experimental details, rather in the way the experiments are modeled. I understand the theory of quantum optics quite well.

I see. I will look for further references, but I am not sure how long it may take. But Carmichael and Gardiner are both well-known theorists and should be a good starting point.

However, in a nutshell the reason for the finite lifetime is the finite reflectivity of the cavity mirrors, which allows for some leakage of photons out of the cavity (and leakage of the reservoir outside into the cavity). This finite lifetime of course also results in a finite line width in the Fourier domain. Now, the natural choice for field quantization inside the cavity is a field mode with the same spectral characteristics as the cavity cannot sustain a monochromatic mode anyway. This of course also results in the coherence time of the cavity becoming a natural time scale of the system.
With respect to modeling: good question. I know that typical approaches include quantum Ito-type stochastic differential equations ans similar approaches, but I know too little about these approaches to give any details.

A. Neumaier said:
There is an important difference between virtual particles and virtual states. Do you agree with my definitions in https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/physics-virtual-particles/ ? If not, what is different in the usage of these terms in quantum optics?

I fully agree that both are very different. I can start by giving some examples for these terms outside of high-energy physics.
The most prominent appearance of virtual states besides high-energy I know of is in non-linear optics. For example in two-photon absorption, the intermediate state one photon energy above the ground state would be considered a virtual state. Again, the focus here is on the dynamics of the system, so I cannot say with confidence how this compares to high-energy physics.

For virtual particles, a prominent topic is the ultrastrong coupling regime, which is essentially the Jaynes-Cummings model at coupling strengths, where the rotating wave approximation breaks down and you need to consider the terms that do not conserve energy explicitly or the question of quantization in a dielectric medium - or both. The article by Glauber, which I linked earlier is on the dielectric part. I am no expert on ultrastrong coupling, but this article cites a lt of the relevant references in this field:
(https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-01504-5).

However, it is my impression that all of these topics in the non-high energy sense are more or less always based on the question of field quantization in non-trivial systems, which means lossy ones or dielectrics or similar problems. I cannot really judge, but I have the impression that your definition is pretty complete for the case of empty space and relativistic quantum field theory.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #37
Cthugha said:
I fully agree that both are very different.
But this leaves me confused about your criticism in #31. Why did you mention virtual states at all? Is your complaint that I interpret their virtual excitations and virtual photons as virtual particles whereas I should interpret them as virtual states of photons? Then how would you interpret their statement about ”photons, which spontaneously arise and vanish in the ground state”? I can understand that a photon in an unstable ground state can vanish spontaneously but how could it be created spontaneously?

Cthugha said:
I can start by giving some examples for these terms outside of high-energy physics.
The most prominent appearance of virtual states besides high-energy I know of is in non-linear optics. For example in two-photon absorption, the intermediate state one photon energy above the ground state would be considered a virtual state. Again, the focus here is on the dynamics of the system, so I cannot say with confidence how this compares to high-energy physics.

For virtual particles, a prominent topic is the ultrastrong coupling regime, which is essentially the Jaynes-Cummings model at coupling strengths, where the rotating wave approximation breaks down and you need to consider the terms that do not conserve energy explicitly or the question of quantization in a dielectric medium - or both. The article by Glauber, which I linked earlier is on the dielectric part. I am no expert on ultrastrong coupling, but this article cites a lt of the relevant references in this field:
(https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-01504-5).

However, it is my impression that all of these topics in the non-high energy sense are more or less always based on the question of field quantization in non-trivial systems, which means lossy ones or dielectrics or similar problems.
Thanks.
 
  • #38
A. Neumaier said:
But this leaves me confused about your criticism in #31. Why did you mention virtual states at all? Is your complaint that I interpret their virtual excitations and virtual photons as virtual particles whereas I should interpret them as virtual states of photons? Then how would you interpret their statement about ”photons, which spontaneously arise and vanish in the ground state”? I can understand that a photon in an unstable ground state can vanish spontaneously but how could it be created spontaneously?

Oh, I see. This was probably hard to understand. The comment was mainly due to your defense of Carmichael as a well-respected and honored theorist (which he is - without any doubt) with respect to the question of terminology of quantum jumps, while simultaneously dismissing reference [32] as just another paper by the authors. While indeed one of the authors is also a coauthor of reference [32], that paper is first and foremost a paper by Zimmermann, who is just as renowned, both as a scientist with respect to his work on many-body physics and as a person with respect to how he pursued his scientific career in the GDR without being an informer. However, I do not get what virtual states have to do with it.

edit: Argh, sorry. Now I see what you mean: it should have been vacuum states, not virtual states. Sorry. This happens, when students come rushing in while typing.

With respect to your other question: Well, in the overall true vacuum state this of course cannot happen, but I do not see this problem in an open system. The loss channel is something like tunneling through the cavity mirrors. However, the same mirror also offers a way for scattering into the cavity. This is your mechanism for spontaneous photon creation. Of course this results in a ground state that depends on the environment.

Is this in the sense of QFT? No, absolutely not. However, I have no better idea on how to describe the state of a system in contact with an environment I can neither control, nor have much information about. All of this is inherently non-equilibrium physics.
Still, what should be criticized about the paper is definitely the fact that the authors should have emphasized the role of the electro-optical crystal. This is really important.
 
  • #39
Cthugha said:
Oh, I see. This was probably hard to understand. The comment was mainly due to your defense of Carmichael as a well-respected and honored theorist (which he is - without any doubt) with respect to the question of terminology of quantum jumps, while simultaneously dismissing reference [32] as just another paper by the authors. While indeed one of the authors is also a coauthor of reference [32], that paper is first and foremost a paper by Zimmermann, who is just as renowned, both as a scientist with respect to his work on many-body physics and as a person with respect to how he pursued his scientific career in the GDR without being an informer.
Ok; I see. I'll check again the content of that paper and will then word more carefully.

Cthugha said:
I do not see this problem in an open system. The loss channel is something like tunneling through the cavity mirrors. However, the same mirror also offers a way for scattering into the cavity. This is your mechanism for spontaneous photon creation. Of course this results in a ground state that depends on the environment.
Ok.

Cthugha said:
People usually talk about stuff like that, when they talk about virtual particles in dielectric media and not about internal lines in Feynman diagrams.
This comment is too fuzzy for me to comprehend. What is their usage of the term virtual particle and virtual photon? And is a virtual excitation just the excitation to a quickly decaying metastable level? I may need to update the definition part of the other Insight article.
 
  • #40
A. Neumaier said:
This comment is too fuzzy for me to comprehend. What is their usage of the term virtual particle and virtual photon? And is a virtual excitation just the excitation to a quickly decaying metastable level? I may need to update the definition part of the other Insight article.

I am not sure how to phrase that, because I am quite convinced that on the theory side you know much more about the topic than I do. Please note that I mentioned two usages of the term that describe very different scenarios. I will now do my best to describe one of them. This is the one used more in ultrastrong coupling, but not really in the paper your insights article was about. If you are interested rather in the other one, let me know.

One of the possible usages of the term is brought up with respect to the question of field quantization in dielectrics. I guess you are well aware that bare photons are not eigenstates of the electromagnetic field inside some material. The Glauber paper I cited earlier analyzes this situation and finds that if you want to describe the state of the light field inside the material based on empty space operators, you will find a squeezed state. A squeezed state has a photon number distribution containing only even photon numbers, so there is a natural connection to photon pair creation. Of course Glauber also discusses the choice of operators in detail. You can find some transformed creation and annihilation operators that describe effective modes inside the medium, where the vacuum state behaves like an ordinary vacuum state. Now the interesting question that arose decades later is, what happens if you introduce fast dynamics, which may mean that you introduce a modulation of the Rabi frequency on short timescales. In that case, the question about which set of operators describes your system adequately becomes a pretty nontrivial one and this is what one part of the virtual particle articles is about.

The Riek et al. paper is rather about the implications of open systems - although they hide that very well in their article. If the notion of virtual particles in that scenario was your main focus of interest, this is about the question of how to treat an environment you do not have detailed information about adequately. I can try to come up with a detailed example, if you want to, but the rough idea is that a virtual excitation is equivalent to the environment leaking into your system of interest.
 
  • #41
A. Neumaier said:
I'd need something that explains in quantum optics (or if necessary semiconductor) terms how the finite lifetime of the fundamental photon mode (a) arises, and (b) affects the modeling of typical experimental situations. I am not so much interested in experimental details, rather in the way the experiments are modeled. I understand the theory of quantum optics quite well.
The "photon decay" is simply due to imperfect cavities. A perfectly reflecting mirror is a theoretical fictition, though nowadays they have amazingly good ones. For a real-world cavity there's thus always some probability for the photon to being absorbed by the walls of the cavity. Mathematically it's pretty much analogous to the same calculation as in classical electrodynamics. The reason is that a lot can be done in linear-response approximation, and as long as the models are linear in the fields, the "operator-valuedness" of the mathematical objects doesn't play much of a role. The observables are then calculated by taking the appropriate averages or evaluating the corresponding probabilities, using auto-correlation functions of the fields.

Of course, you have to distinguish the notion of "virtual particles" in the HEP community, where they deal with "vacuum QED", i.e., scattering processes of two incoming particles to some other particles (or elastic scattering). In quantum optics you deal with "in-medium QED". It's usually sufficient to treat the matter involved (dielectrics, metals, making up the usual optical equipment like lenses, mirrors, beam splitters) in non-relativistic approximation. As long as linear response is sufficient you can use, e.g., dispersion theory which has been developed very early in the history of QT in the semiclassical approach (treating the em. field classical and the matter with non-relativistic QM). In modern many-body QFT terms all these linear response functions for the photons is just described by the (retarded) in-medium photon-polarization tensor, or in other words, the em. current-current correlation function.

In my field of relativistic heavy-ion collisions we deal with the same quantity in the relativistic regime to evaluate the in-medium production rates of photons and "dileptons" (i.e., lepton-antilepton pairs).

Then, with the advent of the laser, you also deal with strong fields and non-linear optics, which is also well understood in terms of phenomenological response functions.

For me quantum optics is just a side-subject because of my interest in the fascinating (real-world physics!) possibilities to test the very foundations of QT by experiment. So I'm not an expert, but my favorite textbooks on Quantum optics are

Scully, Zubairy, Quantum Optics, Cam. Uni. Press
Garrison, Chiuao, Quantum Optics, Ox. Uni. Press

Then there's of course the comprehensive bible:

Mandel, Wolf, Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics, Cam. Uni. Press
 
Last edited:
  • Informative
Likes mfb
  • #42
vanhees71 said:
Then there's of course the comprehensive bible:

Mandel, Wolf, Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics, Cam. Uni. Press

Which is a great book, but could use some revised edition as the notation used is somewhat outdated in some parts.

On the textbook level, the book most theorists I know consider as thorough and reasonably detailed, is:
Vogel, Welsch, Quantum Optics, Wiley VCH
It also contains at least a short discussion on non-monochromatic photon modes, which is missing in many basic introductory texts.

Also Schleich's book on quantum optics in phase space is good, if one is interested in continuous variables and phase space distributions.
 
  • Like
Likes vanhees71
<h2>1. What are vacuum fluctuations?</h2><p>Vacuum fluctuations are small, temporary changes in the energy levels of a vacuum. They are a fundamental aspect of quantum mechanics and can be thought of as the spontaneous creation and annihilation of virtual particles in a vacuum.</p><h2>2. How do vacuum fluctuations impact experimental practice?</h2><p>Vacuum fluctuations can have a significant impact on experimental practice, especially in the field of quantum mechanics. They can cause noise and uncertainty in measurements, and can also affect the behavior of particles and their interactions with each other.</p><h2>3. Can vacuum fluctuations be observed directly?</h2><p>No, vacuum fluctuations cannot be observed directly. They are a theoretical concept that is used to explain certain phenomena in quantum mechanics. However, their effects can be indirectly observed through experiments and measurements.</p><h2>4. How do scientists account for vacuum fluctuations in their experiments?</h2><p>Scientists account for vacuum fluctuations in their experiments by using mathematical models and calculations based on quantum mechanics. These models can help predict the effects of vacuum fluctuations on experimental results and allow scientists to account for them in their analysis.</p><h2>5. Are vacuum fluctuations important for everyday life?</h2><p>While vacuum fluctuations are a fundamental aspect of the universe, they do not have a significant impact on everyday life. They are most relevant in the field of quantum mechanics and are not directly observable in our daily experiences.</p>

1. What are vacuum fluctuations?

Vacuum fluctuations are small, temporary changes in the energy levels of a vacuum. They are a fundamental aspect of quantum mechanics and can be thought of as the spontaneous creation and annihilation of virtual particles in a vacuum.

2. How do vacuum fluctuations impact experimental practice?

Vacuum fluctuations can have a significant impact on experimental practice, especially in the field of quantum mechanics. They can cause noise and uncertainty in measurements, and can also affect the behavior of particles and their interactions with each other.

3. Can vacuum fluctuations be observed directly?

No, vacuum fluctuations cannot be observed directly. They are a theoretical concept that is used to explain certain phenomena in quantum mechanics. However, their effects can be indirectly observed through experiments and measurements.

4. How do scientists account for vacuum fluctuations in their experiments?

Scientists account for vacuum fluctuations in their experiments by using mathematical models and calculations based on quantum mechanics. These models can help predict the effects of vacuum fluctuations on experimental results and allow scientists to account for them in their analysis.

5. Are vacuum fluctuations important for everyday life?

While vacuum fluctuations are a fundamental aspect of the universe, they do not have a significant impact on everyday life. They are most relevant in the field of quantum mechanics and are not directly observable in our daily experiences.

Similar threads

  • Quantum Physics
Replies
10
Views
1K
  • Quantum Physics
7
Replies
220
Views
20K
Replies
31
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
726
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
33
Views
2K
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
15
Views
2K
Replies
27
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
491
Replies
1
Views
770
  • Quantum Physics
Replies
8
Views
2K
Back
Top